At least 15% of annual 2mm sea level rise in last 5 years down to Antarctic ice

Penguin colonies being trapped by Antarctic sea ice breaking off from the main ice sheet

Greenland Ice Sheet melt increased

NASA satelite observations of Greeland have shown the ice sheet to be breaking up much faster than expected. in the journal "Science", NASA scientists spoke out without the approval of the Bush Administration – they warned sea levels could rise by 6 feet this century by the ice melt from Greenland. Yet more water would come from the Antarctic.

Arctic sea ice retreating

7.8m km2 in 1980

6.1m km2 in 2004

Heat Wave, Western Europe, 2003

25,000 people died

World Health Organisation says 150,000 people are dying annually due to global warming. This will double by 2020. The deaths are caused by increased spread of disease in Latin America, Asia and Africa – caused by higher temperatures

Greenpeace says that 1 in 4 plant and animal species could become extinct in the next 50 years. That’s 1 million species at risk.

The area of the world affected by droughts has doubled since 1970.

Hadley Centre run climate models and emphasise there is still huge uncertainty on the rate by which the world will warm this century. Some models show a possibility of an 11°C global temperature rise by 2100

Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change says expect temperature rises of up to 5.8°C by 2100 and sea level rise of nearly 1 metre – if we carry on burning as before.

EU has set policy target of no more than 2°C temperature rise

Even this would be enough to increase spread of malaria in Africa

UNEP warn "billions face hunger and starvation" if temperatures in the tropics increase by 2°C – the impact upon agriculture

This month, Christian Aid warned 182 million people would die in Africa this century due to diseases caused by climate change

What can be done?

Alternative technologies

Renewable energy

Wind turbines

Solar hot water

Solar PV

Wave

Tidal

Ground Source Heat Pump

Bio-fuels

Micro generation

Low-carbon

Carbon Sequestration – lock CO2 up underground

Energy efficient lightbulbs – each keeps ½ ton CO2 from being released during bulb’s lifetime

CHP Boiler

Public transport

More efficient car

Hybrid petrol/electric

Smaller

NOT a 4×4

Carbon-free transport

Cycling

Walking

Lifestyle change

Don’t fly abroad

Buy local produce – reduce food miles

Don’t leave things on standby – switch them off: standby accounts for 10% of electricity usage in homes and offices

FoE

Big Ask

Over half of MPs have signed EDM 178

Hoping to get CC bill included in Queen’s speech

Sign online – seefoe.org.uk

Conclusion

This is the defining moral issue of our time. We, as individuals are all defined by our response to what is clearly an unprecedented threat. We will be judged by those that follow us.

On the Today programme on 29th March, the Archbishop of Canterbury said: “I think in the first instance the moral responsibility lies with absolutely everybody, not only in terms of examining our own lifestyle and asking what, concretely can be done, but also in sending a message to governments that this is recognised as a priority by the public.”“Nobody … likes talking about enforceable international protocols and yet unless there is a real change in attitude, we have to contemplate those very unwelcome possibilities if we want to the global economy not to collapse and millions, billions of people to die.”“…we’re looking at rising spirals of hunger and deprivation.”

The children born to your family will want to know one thing about you: What you did to stop this calamity that would destroy their lives. Did you fight tooth and nail to stop it, or did you simply accept what was being done – going along with the mass of people, making matters worse.